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Jumping in a swimming pool with your iPhone in your pocket is one way to lose your mobile mojo – which is just what Kelly Flowers, principle of GrowthVine and DMAW’s March Lunch & Learn speaker, did on her recent vacation. She realized it right away, she said, and went on a mad dash to find rice. Alas, the rice method didn’t work to revive her iPhone. Another expensive lesson learned.

This lesson is a good illustration of how attached most of us are to our smartphones or iPads – and being connected on the Internet. So if you think about it, this is one reason why marketers should take a serious look at mobile as part of their marketing strategy. As Flowers pointed out, the statistics on mobile usage are constantly changing – and they are staggering.

The average smartphone will generate 2.6 GB of traffic per month in 2016, a 17-fold increase over the 2011 average of 150 MB per month.

The statistics make it obvious that the world is going mobile. But how can mobile marketing fit into your overall content marketing strategy? Here are 5 types of mobile marketing that Flowers discussed:

1. SMS (text messaging) campaigns. Flowers says SMS is best used for getting people to join a list, take a survey, ask questions for a Q&A, text to donate, or in an interactive texting campaign. Here are gave great examples of how SMS campaigns are used to help ,

Human Rights Campaign used text messaging as part of a multi-part campaign, linking users to a mobile friendly page, giving them a call to action and a form to sign a petition, and asking for donations.

Text4baby, a free service founded by multiple partners in the private and public sectors, is an example of an interactive text campaign. The campaign promotes healthy pregnancies and babies by getting women to text “baby” (or “bebe”) to 511411 to sign up for free text messages timed to their due date or babies’ birth date.

2. Mobile Apps. Flowers suggests that apps are perfect for task-driven activities. Great examples are the Medscape and Epocrates Rx apps, which are used by health care professionals to get up-to-date info on drugs and dosages.

Tip for associations: Partner with a private corporation to create a joint app, rather than go it alone, says Flowers. As an association, you’ve got the most valuable asset – a captive audience. An example of this: American College of Cardiology partnered with Skyscape last year to launch an app that was downloaded more than 4,000 times in its first two weeks.

3. QR Codes. You’ve likely seen QR codes on posters, in print ads, even on billboards. They are those square bar code looking things that you scan with your smartphone to be taken to a website for some campaign. Unfortunately, advertisers seem to put them in odd places where they are practically useless. For example, Flowers saw a QR code on a billboard in a bus stop. But the code was down near the bottom of the poster, plus it had color in it, which made it even more difficult to scan. So after trying and trying, she gave up. How many other people do you think would even try to capture that code as hard as she did?

The point is, just like with any other marketing campaign, you need to understand your audience and where they will be when they try to scan your QR code. Plus, QR codes that are in color are more difficult for some smartphones to scan, says Flowers. And the minimum size of your QR code to be scannable depends on how far from the code the user will be scanning and how dense is the QR code itself.

4. NFC (Near Field Communications). Imagine no more credit cards in your wallet, or pass cards to get through subway gates, or standing in line to rent a car. NFC is a technology that enables smartphones to establish a connection with other devices by touching it or being with a certain proximity. Some phones, such as Blackberry, in the U.S. today are NFC-enabled, but it isn’t widespread yet. This video, which Flowers showed during her presentation, gives you quick look and different things one consumer can do with an NFC-enabled phone.

5. Mobile website. The problem with the mobile web, says Flowers, is everyone has different devices, screen sizes, resolutions, etc. Some organizations are using “responsive web design,” which allows the website to dynamically adjust to fit the size of the device it is being viewed on. That is, the website doesn’t just get tinier when you view it on a smartphone. Instead, the information that you see adjusts, so it is still readable, but you’re viewing only the most important basics, such as the navigation.

Whatever you choose to do with mobile marketing, make sure your start with an organization level mobile strategy, advises Flowers. Your first steps will be to do an internal mobile audit. Look at what would make sense for your organization, what programs could benefit from mobile marketing. Survey your members to find out what devices they use and what there attitudes are about mobile.

And remember that mobile is an engagement tool – so when planning your mobile strategy, think about how you will engage your members.